Eh: (gum-diam Gov-in Priim Edward Illllnd LikI Th- Dr! ‘ W..I. Hlntux. Puhltlh-r ‘ mm mil. 3 Iii-univ- 2a.... rubtiihui Mn, mi dIy MW.“ [except Sun ‘IYI Ind I’llulory helidiyil It H5 Pun:- Sir-It. cadmium. em u, Thairvcn mm...” iiq hum alum .i summits. Montague, Alla-i tun Ind Scum. Represented mam, b, m7... new..." Adv-ruling Servizvn Toronto 425 tuitverviv it. Em an‘ied on (main _ ntt e im ,i “A . Ftlnli will.» mi... Del. 5 nihilism AunrlIlion and the tuna..." pm ii ti lxruxvelv cit-vino w till . Iiuhcn iii Ill he“ m. w... n d In it u. t. thi- Aimim‘cu Pie“ N scum. 'tl‘ ni-i heiem All .. .l dxooiLliet hmin . .iia club in m mi .m. right. at iipusuutm o‘ lllD fllflvzd s l m. 3: in no i . not Invited _. sism . ,uu all t .l m it. szrotl m, w. in us mus. Erluh Cam- munwealth m p rnlbu' \m i-1.\il Friendly Reminder Prime .\liiu_-lir l‘c.: sun bud the opportunily, on lletiiiestlliy, of ad- dressing an important dinner party in New Yorh :i’ \l’lit‘h \\'.l<hin;ztnn‘s top political twine. uere represent- ed, and iii “I'lll i‘te >lllIrUIl the Itine- light iiizh litl\'t’i‘nl\l' Nelson A. Rockefeller, )li. Penn-on usually It his best at STICII gatherings. and -~ no exeepttnn. -C.ina:liin “ITS. Ol'l His theme relations, and his mnplia the fact that Americans would be wise to consider (‘liuada not as an \l'll: him: the US. propiwm, hut as a friendly foreign poll'er. The first duty of a Canadian government. he reminded his hearers, is to protect (‘liiiatlilin national inter-lute, The Prime lliliiste lowed one in which the New governor snid there «:hould be a per- manent body, at the clibiiiet level. to strengthen the lmliesinn of the West. ern Hemisphere. Furlier .‘Tr. Rocks. feller had suggested a cabinet-level body to explore wars of strengthen- ing NATO. i’iilll said the same I! needed for US . Canadian, and Latin American Altai . Mr. Pearson freely conceded that Canadian national interc‘is cannot be considered and safeguarded apart from those of the United StatES. "When the results of your choice Ire good." he said, “this is to our quick and great allvuntliue. When they are had, he nfren are the first and foremost country to suffer. No wonder." he added. “we worry Ibout what ymi do. You may worry About us too but While we can mere— ly hurt you by sortie fiscal or taxa- tion measure. you can ruin us by one of mu " Among his liiillitors was L13. Commerce Set‘relal‘y Luther H. Hod— ges, who, of En“ e. did not need to be reminded that Canada’s balance of trade for the first three quarters of this year stlintls III. $370.600,000 in favor of the I‘nited States. This is more equitable than it has been at times in the past. but it repre- sents piirchnscs ten times as heavy Is our purchases from Britain under Commonwealth preferences, and Ihows how tightly we are. caught in the American economic orbit. Mr. Pearson ended hi. speech on t plea for ‘a izrenter effort of mu— tual understanding." Let us hope that it will sink in. InVIles Suggestions On July 8. when Finance Minis— ‘ter Gordon made his statement in the House of Commons that the bud- get he had prewlitcd with such as— surance on July 13 would be greatly changed, he said: “The old saying ’that only he who wears the shoe knows where it pint-hes has nlwa s been as true of taxes as of most thing. The complexity of modern .husiness. and, therefore. the com- plexity of modern taxation, has made it increasingly difficult for governments to foresee all the lid- l'ministratire prohlems and all the consequences of tax changes." 3 Thc minister. in chnstened mood. lwent on to acknowledge “with imtitude the representations and fouggostlons that have been made." lEvidently the experience of those {only oinbcrressi'nu reactions to his .budgat. is still fresh in Mr. Gordon‘s imind. And it h- to hli credit thi: it lotide be so, for it Iii the part of lwisdom to heed the lessons of ex- poi-1m. hmthIthewiiinotmIkc .fi. lune mistlkeii nyliln. Mr. Gm Jr. b m inviting Iuggestiona for , r .i’ his next budget from key Canadian organizations or even from interest- ed individuals. He has kild the Com. mons that he will be sending invita- tions in \ 'iting to such groups as the (‘anallian liabnr Congress, the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. the (‘aiiadiaii (‘hamher of Fommerre, the manufacturers, the exporters and others. All submissions should he made before January 31. so that thin be considered before the hurtgei is drawn up. If submissions are made eiirlier. and are made pub. lic, «mi? discussion could take place, The responsibility for making decisions on the merits of these pl'esv eniatinns. of course, will still be up to the finance minister. And be mu<i he linuhly careful, in helm‘nlz them, not to tip his hand. He miist pliiv it through with a poker face until the occasion comes for him to lay his cards on the table. in his budget delivery. It will be quite a feat if he plillll it off, and satisfies all concerned as to his scrupulosity. A step to be commended. in any case. and to be welcomed as evidence that Mr. Gordon is making a real attempt to grow up with his job. Chips & Prairie Wheel The Hamilton Spectator tlikcs note of the fact that transatlantic shipping rates may be increased be cause of the booming business brought by Canada's mammoth \vheat sale to Soviet Russia, and thlit Prince Edward Island’s new British market for frozen french fried pota- toes mny be jeopar ' ed as a result. Considering that this is a business of infinite possibilities, it says. and that some 5.000 tons of potatoes are ready for processing. the anxiety is understandable, “Compared with the Soviet wheat deal." adds the. Hamilton paper, ‘ his may seem like small potatoes —no fun intendediblit if shipping rates went up and l'anadian french frieds were. fniced out of the British market, P.E.l. farmers would get a nasty shock. There is some talk— not in official circles—of a subsidy if the worst Comes to pass and I'rn7eu chips become I victim of pm prosperity." All that “9 can add to this and to what we have already said on the subject is that if the. subsidy talk hasn't by this time reached “official circles" at Ottawa, it is high time it did. mm Buy A Poppy Just a reminder, as we approach Remembrance Day, that our citizens attain have the opportunity of con- tributing to the fund raised by the Royal Canadian Legion through its annual sale of Poppies. This is a special fund. administered by the. Legion solely for the benefit of ex— service men and women and their dependents requiring material las- . stance. As the years pass. the need [or such assistance does not slacken; for the war veterans. like the rest of us, are growing older and many of them, apart from the numerous in~ stances of disability, now lack the capacity to compete for jobs. This nation is heavily in debt to our veterans, as well as to those who made the supreme sacrifice in our muse. and whose memory we shall honour on Monday. it: in a debt quite beyond our power to discharge, but the Legion Poppy Fund gives us an opportunity to show our awareness of the obliga- tinn. EDITORIAL NOTES The stater white oak that In- spired Joyce Kiimer to write the poem “Trees” will soon be ciit down. Efforts of tree surgeons. Rutgers University officials, and sentimenta- lists have failed to preserve, the gnarled oak. which stands enclosed by a small white fence on the Rut» gen campus. A committee has now been named to chop down the oak and dispose of it in n way that he- fits its fame. . - a What will It cost Canadian tax- payers to implement the Pearson Government's pledge to Iccept American nuclear warheads in Clin— ada? That wun't discussed In the election campaign. but according to I Government answer tAhIi‘d In the Cannons, the estimated emits of .tonge buildings, handling equip- ment, mototh personnel. etc" Ire II follows: Won-recurring. Ippmd— ninter $7,600,000: Annual recur- ring, Ipproximutely $8,800,000." i .iAcKJ L’M'f 5E6 ' Tue «an Fall A Moon \ TRIP RIGHT New BRITISH COMMENTA LUNAR ECLIPSE RY Cuban Crisis Seen As Turning Point \ \l‘ r am iIIr' sliviul l'nmn By ii Ewer United Kiuciium uiuimaiiuu si-ri- ul "appeasenirni", lhun 7 in Ice the West by a country which and the Western i’nuers — End another in m on I Communist vii ould be ninch than cell-sini- tlirrefnre lhc tvnuic u-niu7n-ci-c t my near to the brink ul nuclear u: \' 'l‘l'l‘. i think, than most n >uli ‘tt ll: (HE‘l‘ the Bill as Sir 1h sis “Killian r ~ ome' in most mlndsl noted 1 the nlher day ll w b s not iii a t and we have passed ilirnuizh b t till at All problems 7 the r Phrase 7 the Soviet uii Ion , would huvc secured another t “slice oi the salami". a lion which could be in due course Ii lllN‘ did Iinl,lhcn nip operation cnui hr railed oif before the "brink" was reached, t n has been . dangerous policy . porting. Now potatoes are inbri. And the Soviet pres s crrriel troubled rcpo rt: of peasants sluughterlng “me because 0! lack oi fodder. That is a situation which rc- quires iuy government to con- centrate bu the molt TundAlllefr l’t\‘. only occasion He listed th 1' ee grimly dangerous period But I , aim: of food (or iLI people. It i: mm at illt‘ past years — Laos. borliu .1an Cuba 7 which had b r n u g h i that estt‘s‘imhhlc “ii—ink” unhm sizlit nrua perhaps apart these tinvu huuiv tlil‘ iiurtd‘s mm dan- geroiis iiiomuuis since nu: end of World wni- ll of stucc the Savior hiwkudu oi Ilorlln in ism ls Ihz- iiurld no“. as medu bulle- tin: s ' ni individuals. "oli the dancer it“ it I: still [hr in soon to be rovi- iidrnt nm 1 tliinktiial one can [or] liiul Ilied u u u r l' im: Ir - wuud Tim has hruu u pf‘rl‘t‘ hiviu P a s i u : til lruunu lllllf‘ll the ins' imu irf‘i’tl," ii one Kiln \Vh_v t: lIii:" r i rsi mic “lust uulu (iii bi lrnsi l'in oi uw tin-us “crises” Broke lmm illlilfllnt‘s of t he St\\l(‘I him i dn nut niran Illvil SilHi't mil- try tine wrhin; nr mrn N‘Mt‘m- plnlinn iiar But It lies embarkr in: nu higly dnncnuu. cnlvr. prises \sbll‘h it may hull bran ‘ yil'l'slsll'd i mild huve iimi tlls- estrous mnin ‘ I‘Al's‘ or RERHV t'ilisi-‘s The Hui-tin Frlsl‘” had broil croiitud hv \lr Khrusiiuhuv‘s sudden and v y drninn tor the ii-niuirnval oi the Wosc- , orii allies tro m Wm luv-iin. t atlcr n W‘rliid iii nine .i rs in \llilrh illi‘l‘P liad bcnu no serious t trouble ’\I all nhmli Berlin The “C ii han crisis" ti b- . caused by the sudden drplo mcni oi sum-i nuuli-ur tom‘s iii the Western hemisphere, iiilhin short range (ii in» United Siales, In l‘hl‘h i'ase the Wesll-rn allies stood quite firmly. ml the 5mm "ui-nhiuz" operations were railed off i say “probin: npfl'nlinns” be. cause i ieol sure that this was what iiu-y were rniimviiiiz I iiic- ‘ iiciii prmm oi Lenin .. the , reactions ul tho Western allies l were being tested, ‘ they i‘ tried. on , iii' Ind mlde Iorlhesake hast Our Yesterdays (From the Gii-rdiiin Files) TWENTY . FIVE YEARS AGO tvuvcmber ii, limit Rev. Rnberi some. assistant director of Old Age Pension: luv the province at New aruucwick ii In Prince Edward isicnii this week to study the operation iii the aid mu Pensions Art in iiiii province Mr simii ls i United rhiirrii ulcruymu and via ciaiimaip «i Premier Campbell iii Dalhniisie University. A .lulilor Bird Club under the aililiutiou with the Canadian Audubon Society wa m‘KAniud Iii Ennshbw school on Frldny About m at the pupil! Joined the (‘illh lillri‘flw llenkinn ol Marsh- Iieid was bwreui lllld milliiied the Ictivltiel'ltl bird clubs, 'I‘EN YEARS AGO mine-Tiber I, 1953) Harold L. Morn“. henomu manager of the (‘hIrlntteiown Hum here repln r'lnl Gordon Fuller. who has left toi- New- inundinnd. Mr "Ml-ll has been in Her 0! the Prince Arthur Hotel for the put yelr, Another Ill’le fell Elilie dell wu completed in the (“Y this WEEK. when Ihe Elaim Trull CmnPiIIU. lctilll Ior the Gordon snub. laid in. Gillian nice: vruium lo "I! mnumc Elec- iric Complny which not: pied Ihe premise: for Ipprlixlu'r Ieuv ‘1 "an think that ii is over i ilunk that t Cuba was ii turning point a iid thin Moscow iaguin in its own laneuaset has “drawn the cor- rect deductions" nurnorinnu: PRORING , The indications rre that the . sin-icl Gorcrnmciii has decided 7 ii any rain (or the time being "15 adwntumlu puiicv o! l prohin 5 too dangerous. and i luv unprofitable It hii been run- , niuu risks iviiiuiul securinfl iuv ‘ gains iiciiiicm calls for us ces- l satinn .\ir Khrinhrlicv ts rrrlainly i renlisl His Stalinist rrltir: (All ‘ him an "opportunlsl" which from them is strange. ini- il ever there on opportunist It was .imcl uiui _ as witness. for uvuinpiu, his pact with Hitler. 'l'liere m uihcv misuus uliich tioiild Srem to rmulr! cuuiinu in Snyiet iorrign policy One IS the rift iviiii Peking The othl‘r is ihe serious rmldi- [ion of the Soviet economy. 05- . ni‘l'lalh at its aaril'ulliirc There is a shortage of breltd and hi all ccrculs 7 necessilair luv moi. liirgc purchases irom n Situation in which no sane gov- ernmeni simiin be tempted to TIsti political or "ideological" enterprises. PROBLEM Fon DIPLOMACV 5 year after being in near reasonably t we are “bIck he brink" confident t ii a lmm the brink The problem (or diplomacy new is In convert that uegativ. change into - positive one, Per- haps by ummuu iii a t h o i- spheres thin the iiugi. one of nuclear leer, 1 iiiii-ik out it would be wrong iii expect, or w uiiciiipz. run much on non. Diplomatic iii:- prcmului-e iticmpu tn rm bl uttiements have pro- duced not settlements hut. sharia ei- uuulltuls 1 Timing is all importnni in sur'i matters and my own strung ieeling is [but 7 in l phrase ul Mr ilhrushciiev'i 7 “us i! n time for “letting the dust settle". There is. l [eel cum. u betier chance niils seitIInK — iiuicii inmcuuu um mmethlng inex- rusably rash 7 lhln there has been tor Lhe put live ycuru, Hair-Raising Experience Furl Willilm Timesplournll The mnrhirim’ M a ir H i hit train ruiiiur west mi the bro 1 track route rpm danger. At a l hiziniav intersection just ahead. 1 Viliere liicrc 'n no wig-wail. two l motor mi are imbued. waiting for his train to pass, The conductor known that iii. . unior imin, lauded with when l for Russia, will run past on the . iiivr track iuii beiore ii reach- es the Intersectan highway. ii I the drivim in mm can rim up and cmsi uic imki I! mini I is his ii-uiu ic cleII'. they will be richiiu the inch or the min train rushiii cm, neciuie oi the noise ii-uiii bis train. th cy nim- not be Ital: to ti o I r the iv slle of the east—bound iriiii. it. quick iihistle iii-iii. the conductor tries In wui-ii the moim'ists ubuu: iiiu peril ihii .wim them, Ai he TIIF CunIdIIli Coast Gulld'l I ~ Ewartence with Arctic ice thll veiv imphuiu- how cucuiiai It i.- in my delence be» May v hl ‘SQIHO‘ Ind memento-l ice- 1 . Admlrll ES leri n Amerien mica bur the am iii missile Iii-eb- ml they would win em in tum-Iii tin Vlll‘ am, "We hm tam WI windows, on In Auntie, not ill the PIclttc Ind a tram: window 1 iii iiie Arctic.” III on imi-ui. To wIlch on out trim with «aw. in. in .- nlnlllrlul In rimmed. in iiiim. And yet it. vino-Id- re Ila m Immune it II but!!! in Ind. more difficult to m. n Illn- OM- ulIdII h AMI: I E driliii I hall film at! In! dummy all. Ind than VlllIIhv m Itllrk Inle- h by Inth pIssel iimii. tic leans out and makes ibsl mntIons with the puiiu of his hand, Irying to sig- via] to them in stay where they in Then. holding his breath. the caudch iaokn luck to in ii have uuocriiuod, No! They hunt! The first driver imb- on the Iccelerntor and mum. The other ii-uiii misses hitting nu. back of his m by Ibnut i loot nr two! The driver or the Iecond m. with three or luur childicii in It. pull his vchicic in motion tan! But just in time he leel the other erII. He coinc- in ten on the one luck. his: iii- chci min the pulsing cm! The conductor relenel brew-391ml! lt iii in They in iii-blur. To himieil. ii. a: 3: mi. "Tiim mist be a beau-i- way of mukiiig . livlnl Defense Under Ice out". Infill bu. yeir pmvcd liic limiutiunl oi Iiiri micii which cuiqu luIrIi-itee to right vubmuriuei in mm when Summer Mimic were commend mibic. much i:- in m cll'lyoul under the c. Delivery of um iiia perm- MI It Artie billion! wen delU‘ edbylceant-rmenulior I week or more. while the Ihbl waited I diam II wind or dd. Ia oven clam-Tell. Pmflul imflm returned with debt.- 0‘ plum: mm dImlged imi- let vouch luv] to be towed South to drydockl, Defence mullet )lellyer. hl- dmd MM moat-u Alf! on I nibmarlne fleet. with one non-melon menu val. Ill Int 0‘ «in II the vi loll Mm.” N-Ith in in. Our Arlic Mutton Inna uuviui- .qunriiie. Th- 1:qu aunt auction“ "at we will Ille lode Hillel .11. Lead Poisoning And Moonshine By in, More ii. viiiineiic- LEAD - LADEN mm hiii. clued the death of ii 30 - ye,r - old wuiiiiii, it via not the liquor thIt killed her but the lad. Ac- eoiviiiig in Dr, Robert. w. Willett or Ile . N.c. the iourcc oi ield in illicit whisky wni bolder used to lulu the piper of the still. Aulaiiiablic i-uiiiuwn cmpiuycd u ccudcuici-i Ind uuiii batteries Idded tn the him. A reIl cun- iuiiiieur must have thoullil of throwing the» bllterlel iiilu the mush. This biiviiciiii iiiyi Gem-3h iiiid Nani ii u d suuui cmiiu. produce 50 million gciioiic oi moonshine every you. The air- uilm m not tub lusiy or con- earned iboui the lead content. Lend poiiouiug lmm liquor ii in» new in the circiiuii. n. wiii - common practice during coil» nlal dlyl La inn is much u so per cent 1m in the lllay kulmu u pewter. Modern pewter ii composed oi tin with lutillu‘my, capper, And blimutb acting u huiieuliiq Igenu, s m i ii Imo- unts oi lcuu my be included. umiiiy leii thin in pel‘ cciil. mu polsontnl ldry - gripei) was prevIlent .moiig aul' colo- nlsLi but the real cluse m detection — drinking nim made iii leaded pewicr ciilii Poison- ing reached epidemic iii-«por- tian and some oi the North Cur- ollnli drinkers iv e ic smart cu- oiigh to associate their "gripes" ‘ with New England rum. Their, compininis u in or! because in . 1723 the Massachusetts Bay cu!» ‘ Olly passed a law prohibiting the i distillation ul ruin through pew- ‘ stills The story behind the law I no t why pun-uni- was seleeled renters , Ibaut a 16 - vcui- - old editor. ‘ Bcuiumin Franklin. The first news of the epidemic in North Carolina cimc ihro u all his l office. He took the mutter more u ' ‘ at Boston uoiubici i loi- consideration beiore publish- t in): ihc story He didn‘t. Want to , gel into trouble with the rum . distillers or land in jail. m of the three CDDiIllllnIJ wcic physicians and they wcre uuciuuy in picking 7 n! all things 7 ilie leaded pewter, All this happened sq mi: before George Baker proved nuii ncv- ouiiiiie cuiic was due to lead in cider mills. unnvn DAMAGE . . ’ ; Would a person with pernicious anemia suffer from pains in the icis frequent. ly and iiud It diificult to walk? va Yes, provided the couuiuuii Was neglected u ntii certain nerves in the spinal cord degen- t armed This is the most urinul complinntInn oi pernicious anc- , mic and explains why the indivi- , duil needs liiiectlonl iii vitamin ‘ BIZ or liver extract at stipulated Intervals. WHY-NECK ‘ Mr), Rs. write My 3-year- I old has had a u. _ - neck since l hirtli. His head team to mic iide 1 Ind the lace iii the under-numb l Ilde ii imflIIEI‘ than the uni ci- t side. Do you think nperItion ‘ would cure this caudiiioul REPLY l Yes. but the a ‘mmetn' oi the i ince may persist Best results lire obtained when the operation in done ulier the first birthday. l .i.p. vines: What should -; person do when another person , goes into a diabetic coma? i . LY i Cell his physician immediately because Insulin I! n e e d 2 d to bring the patient out of the qmi. HEPATITIS HOUSEHOLD .B. WI‘IIES‘ 15 It sdfe in vlllt in i household whim mm ii I use oi hepatitis” ' l RE i Yes, but avoid personal rnn- ' tnci with me invalid and don't use his toilet article], dlshes. at It odI iiniiii mm _. ‘ Obesity ldlh to the flsk oi generative diseIses. MIKOYAN necovnnnn MOSCOW tAPI — Anlsfll L tMlkuynn, iii-ii deputy Soviet premier, .ppcmu at I public l maptllm Friday aimed and bull ported illness. (in! deputy ills twic ' ii. Ia night lookin‘ ily me n- l Th dil- lit-old been ill ll lent ye :- snn NTHEszALT -I ‘i McCUllOCH : | Chain 5 I Saws P I Keith ciuiiiiciiuoi I LTD. I l’lione 4M2! fl Int:qu Pulnl m Sherwood ----- Ta In any uncl- try to my up with an JuueIel even when they don't like the direcuoii iii which the Jonem m India]. _. miiw- Journal The VIuoiivu- Prayian quuta thll rodilll’lbutlnn of the Dominion rldinu be under- taken without politics. What! TIke III the inn out of Hie-Pel- erbornulli Exlminer. Clll um- in much iii." Wall'yil‘ mm the guy who speak: intimately iiid c-iu-uy oi cipii on the iii-cum iii . post-cud he received min the iii-inn 7 Sim. mini-m. They're min. In! yIrb lrotlld lbout uh: youngltgr It the Wen glide Elm” who kuught m annual harvut pilgrim in his “Infill, "Think you Dave," tho and!!! mailed. "I will wInt you to mnember in flunk your other I'ul' these nine big mi applet" M it doesn’t make my Menace to yDu ml'IllI," the ymIms r . wmild you Die“: thInk IIEI‘ for undiul ll! ml lypl "' Mmlton Siu', Despite Soviet Premier xiiiuiiivlvev'i claim that the United States yielded in estab- lished procedure, there is ev- ery Indication the Soviet. guards ‘ settled for I lot ieu than they demIrided iii iiuully lining in American convoy ou the mild to sci-nu. The Russians winicd Aim-ri- cuii troops to diiiiiuiiiii from the convoy llld be omitted Ameri- can Iulhfll’lties refused, The Soviet commander. It the nail ccrmuii checkpoint, Llicn uikcd that imuk tuiiguics be lowered to facilitate the count. Tiiii ignin wai miused. Finally. the cummnnde'r asked that troops inside truck: be iii mi 0‘ inc vchicici so thIt they i counted without dis- iomc dtlpute u to huw lir uie Amerinn unmmiuider went to meet this limi- dEmIIId but in my case. the Soviet gun-iii did peer into the trucks Ind uicu unuw them to proceed, ilicr holding up the convoy for i: am. NOT worm! RISK Whatever interpretation an be piiccd mi this mini cicucii compromise. it mm. hardly WDflh i isll no that Khrushchev now iuyi it could have led In wii, «weir. ll he placed iii mlt i value on cxii-icuiir “estIhlIIheii procedure" min the Amariclni. it ii difficult in undersmld why lie did no: pun loi- iimiiii- commiaes Iiom French Ind Erltllh eon- vqyi iuiicid at lettinl them through with only taken hlr- nscmcnt, . A view wider held iii Weal- u'n quarter: in that Khnlh- they in not “I much concerned about "csthIlshed vmcedui-ci" as he in to continue to illime , on Western Allie] he 11 the boil on the question of Western Ic- con [0 neiiiii. Through harassment oi cnu. vuvi he meIi-I to wlnt to make clear lie nill demand! i iluui mnemciic i7! the beriiii illue. The West, lie muesli. ciuiuid conclude rim hm cause the RunInlll iiivc troll- blu with null China Ind with i mil iiionm ii hume. iii. Berlin iiiue clfl he went un- der thz i-ug. briulii Ind the us. hm mica settlement at the Berlln iscue Ilimlld be comian only in the context nf leniement i‘ the lIrgei- Germ-fl Ind Euro- pciu iuuei. But Soviet. rmirii Miutitci- Ornmyko IIII iii. formed the Wuici-u Allie: ii- NOTES BY THE WAY iii-mm Io Inceden: the n. "In penal: iiiii 24 ribs, non. of which ciii be IDIl‘Ed. 7 c2... iii. Observer. Tlxplyerl 'fll'fied cbuui iii- mounting cniii oi iid-age Den. iiuiii in Canada My be Inter. cited in learning that iccoiiiiu. to the 1960 census there were more than 10.000 persons vn the us. who were inn yell-s old or tilde. HerIId. — Stretfom Beacon. The uiiiy exercile iume ioliu gel in jumping to canclusiuui, running down their friend]. Side- cumiinu ii- relplmsihilitiel Ind puiIilm: their in: o k ville Journal . nccuiu. Every Cublll “thermal: iiiqii will line to supply six print... I rid l certificate to in. government to prove he'i Rally ii: iii: bii nan The mini: m mIny dinItlIiled ciiizcni iim been slipping iwiy bu xo—cllled “tubing boll-l." This ii cruel. thcvcr burn of requiring u brim to stick to bi: mini .umi prove it wiui mmaphii 7st. Cuuicniica stand-lid. Berlin Convoy Episode By l-i-i-uia Murriimi Clnndiln T’er St!" Writer insists the Berlin Issue ii.- iii... dl M a separate min" Western Allies appear pre- pared to mcei harassing lactirs tor a lung time While Khrushchev ms nu convoy episode could have ex- ploded into war, the ucluai ruli- irontaiinn SuEfleSLS both Siill‘! handled the incident With us. murkable coolness. Let’s Dine Out At The Charlottetown Mather, toe, do“!!! a to h d I I o I over . . . from! from tho apron strings. Give her I tvIat.TIkotiiI whal lini- ly in lunch-en or dinnur It Till Charlottetown Hotel. She'll like It Suplrb lulla- tlons irorn only $1.60. The ChIrlemtown Hotel Is lhI lduIl plus to bring your iIvnuritI friend . . you: I . . your very apaclaltamliy.8puclll niInu rain ior child" . it you can‘t make term the treat day — ooml In on lllyl Icl-I acculon. it... Charlottetown Hotel CAI be Mr Robert come. First District Ouuns Progressive Conservative Association ANNUAL MEETING SATURDAY. NOV. WIT—830 PM. IRADALIANE HALL Federal membsn. Premier Shaw and Frank Meyen will be in attendance. Guest: speaker will . Castes, Member of Parliament for Gumbel-ind County, New Scotil. Everyone Wel— Dougiin Macklnnon m. Wiilmi many Preliflent. GUARAN E CERTIFICATES l... INVESTMENT ethic» m lufl‘umlll. mm» TRUST We Mm. rm.